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's adoption of the jury system and France's adoption of Romano-canonical procedure in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. They … argue that these choices implied greater centralization of justice in France than in England. We examine the historical … French Revolution, justice was more centralized in England and than in France. The different trial procedures, moreover, did …
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developed trials by jury, while the less peaceful France relied on state-employed judges for both collecting evidence and making … France remained less peaceful than England), and may explain many differences between common and civil law traditions with …
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developed trials by jury, while the less peaceful France relied on state-employed judges for both collecting evidence and making … France remained less peaceful than England), and may explain many differences between common and civil law traditions with …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012470452
developed trials by jury, while the less peaceful France relied on state-employed judges for both collecting evidence and making … France remained less peaceful than England), and may explain many differences between common and civil law traditions with …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014132365
Legal scholars often classify countries into ‘legal families’. The research on ‘legal origins’ refers to this literature; yet, it then goes further as it uses distinct categories into which each country’s law is allocated in quantitative studies. Today, this line of research, which goes...
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